China defends hike in military budget as proportionate and low

China's increase in military spending for 2018 was proportionate and low, and Beijing has not been goaded into an arms race with the United States, state media said on Tuesday.

"China's defense budget is neither the largest in size - it accounts for just one-fourth of the military spending of the United States - nor does it have the fastest growth rate," the China Daily said.

Widely-read Chinese tabloid the Global Times said if China really wanted to expand militarily, the defense budget should really be rising 20 to 30 percent.

Published 12:12 AM ET Tue, 6 March 2018
Reuters

Greg Baker | AFP | Getty Images

Military delegates leave after the opening session of the CPPCC at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on March 3, 2018.

China's increase in military spending for 2018 — the biggest rise in three years — was proportionate and low, and Beijing had not been goaded into an arms race with the United States, state media said on Tuesday.

China on Monday unveiled an 8.1 percent rise in defense spending at the opening of parliament, fuelling an ambitious military modernisation programme and making its neighbours, particularly Japan and self-ruled Taiwan, nervous. The 2018 defense budget will be 1.11 trillion yuan ($175 billion).

In an editorial, the official China Daily said the figure had prompted "finger-pointing from the usual suspects."

"China's defense budget is neither the largest in size — it accounts for just one-fourth of the military spending of the United States — nor does it have the fastest growth rate," the English-language newspaper said.

"And if calculated in per capita terms, China's military lags well behind other major countries."

China insists its military spending is transparent and that it poses a threat to nobody, simply needing to update old equipment and defend its legitimate interests, even as it is increasingly assertive over disputes in the East and South China Seas and on self-ruled Taiwan, which China claims.

In the East and South China Seas, China is simply trying to stand up for itself, the China Daily said.

China has seen the United States as its biggest potential security threat. U.S. President Donald Trump has proposed the largest military budget since 2011, focused on beefing up the United States' nuclear defenses and countering the growing strength of China and Russia.

Official Chinese defense spending is about one quarter that of the United States, though many foreign analysts and diplomats say China under-reports the figure.

Widely-read Chinese tabloid the Global Times said if China really wanted to expand militarily, the defense budget should really be rising 20 to 30 percent.

"China has obviously not fallen into the mind-set of engaging in an arms race with the U.S. Otherwise it could totally realise double-digit increases in its defense expenditure," the paper said in its editorial.

U.S. provocations in the South China Sea, tension in the Taiwan Strait and the United States, Japan, Australia and India forming alliances demand a rise in spending, it added.